Difference between revisions of "France"
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[[Thomas Decueur]]<ref>''Eureka - A Multicultural Event'' by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.</ref> | [[Thomas Decueur]]<ref>''Eureka - A Multicultural Event'' by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.</ref> | ||
− | [[Antoine Fauchery]]<ref>''Eureka - A Multicultural Event'' by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.</ref> | + | [[Antoine Fauchery]], born Paris, France. <ref>''Eureka - A Multicultural Event'' by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013; K. M. O'Neill, 'Fauchery, Antoine Julien (1827–1861)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/fauchery-antoine-julien-3504/text5385, published first in hardcopy 1972, accessed online 1 January 2022.</ref> |
− | [[Julien Hardy]], | + | [[Julien Hardy]], born Mon Joie, near Vire, Normandy, France |
[[Peter Priaulx]] | [[Peter Priaulx]] | ||
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[[Laurent Roustan]] | [[Laurent Roustan]] | ||
− | [[Charles Trompf]] | + | [[Charles Trompf]], Baldiau (now Piatodorozny), near Konigsburg, East Prussia |
[[James Wells]], born Calais | [[James Wells]], born Calais |
Latest revision as of 07:33, 1 January 2022
The first French in Australia were convicts or free settlers who fled France of the French Revolution of 1789. A significant number of French arrived as a result of the Victorian goldrushes. Antoine Fauchery's photography and book "Letters From a Miner in Australia" recorded interesting aspects of life on the goldfields.[1]
Corsica, and island in the Mediterranean Sea, is one of the 18 regions of France. It is located southeast of the French mainland and west of the Italian Peninsula, with the nearest land mass being the Italian island of Sardinia to the immediate south. A single chain of mountains makes up two-thirds of the island.[2]
- ... The insurgents, we learn, are all with very few exceptions, diggers, and we regret to hear it re ported, that very many of them are French, Americans, and Germans. Our informant tells us that great intimidation is used by those under arms towards the quiet, peaceful, and industrious diggers, no work being allowed, and any man seen going into his hole being threatened with the consequences. ...[3]
Born in France
Antoine Fauchery, born Paris, France. [5]
Julien Hardy, born Mon Joie, near Vire, Normandy, France
Francis Romeo, born Corsica to Italian parents[6]
Charles Trompf, Baldiau (now Piatodorozny), near Konigsburg, East Prussia
James Wells, born Calais
Also See
External Links
http://prov.vic.gov.au/whats-on/exhibitions/eureka-on-trial/perspectives
References
- ↑ Eureka - A Multicultural Event by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corsica, accessed 04 September 2017.
- ↑ Cornwall Chronicle Launceston, 09 December 1854.
- ↑ Eureka - A Multicultural Event by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.
- ↑ Eureka - A Multicultural Event by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013; K. M. O'Neill, 'Fauchery, Antoine Julien (1827–1861)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/fauchery-antoine-julien-3504/text5385, published first in hardcopy 1972, accessed online 1 January 2022.
- ↑ Eureka - A Multicultural Event by Dorothy Wickham and Clare Gervasoni, http://www.ballaratheritage.com.au/articles/nationalities.html, accessed 27 March 2013.